Biography: Wifredo Lam

Wifredo Lam was born in Sagua la Grande, Cuba, on December 8, 1902. He was the eighth child born to Lam-Yam―born in Canton around 1820, an immigrant to the Americas in 1860―and to Ana Serafina Catilla―born in 1862 in Cuba of mixed African and Spanish ancestry.
lam

The luxuriant nature of Sagua la Grande had a strong impact on Lam from early childhood. One night in 1907, he was startled by the strange shadows cast on the wall of his bedroom of a bat in flight. He often recounted the incident as his first magnificent awakening to another dimension to existence.

In 1916, Lam and part of his family settled in Havana. He was enrolled in the Escuela Profesional de Pintura y Escultura, Academia de San Alejandro, where he remained a student until 1923. This period, with exhibitions at the Salón de Bellas artes, was determinant in his choice to become a painter. In 1923, the municipality of Sagua la Grande awarded him a grant to study in Europe and by the autumn of that year, at the age of twenty-one, he left the country for Spain.

His time in Spain―initially intended as a short stay on his way to Paris―lasted 14 years. In Madrid, he was exposed to the ideas and movements of modern art. He spent long hours at the Archeological Museum and the Prado. He studied the great masters of Spanish painting, Velázquez and Goya, but felt particularly drawn to the works of Bosch and Bruegel the Elder. He discovered surprising correlations between western art and so called “primitive” art. In 1931, his first wife, Eva (Sébastiana Piriz) and their son Wilfredo Victor died of tuberculosis. The terrible suffering he endured led to numerous paintings of mother and child. Lam found solace in the company of his Spanish friends and made contact with several political organizations. In 1936, with the help of his friend Faustino Cordón, he joined the Republican forces in their fight against Franco. He designed anti-Fascist posters and took part in the struggle by working in a munitions factory. The violence of the struggle inspired his painting La Guerra Civil.

In 1936, Lam left Spain for Paris. Shortly before leaving, he met Helena Holzer, who would become his wife in 1944. His meeting Picasso in his studio on the Rue des Grands Augustins proved decisive. Picasso introduced his new “cousin” to his painter, poet and art critic friends, Braque, Matisse, Miró, Léger, Eluard, Leiris, Tzara, Kahnweiler, Zervos. Lam also met Pierre Loeb, the owner of the Galerie Pierre in Paris, which hosted Lam’s first solo exhibition in 1939.

Lam and PicassoShortly before the Germans arrived, Lam left Paris for Bordeaux and then Marseille, where many of his friends, for the most part surrealists, had gathered around André Breton in the Villa Air Bel: Pierre Mabille, René Char, Max Ernst, Victor Brauner, Oscar Domínguez, André Masson, Benjamin Péret. In the Villa Air Bel, a meeting place for creativity and experimentation, Lam worked and produced, most notably, a series of ink drawings that set the tone for what would become his signature style of hybrid figures, a vocabulary he would develop more fully during his years in Cuba from 1941 to 1947.

In January and February 1941, Lam illustrated Breton’s poem Fata Morgana which was censored by the Vichy government. On March 25, Lam and Helena Holzer embarked on the “Capitaine Paul Lemerle” headed for Martinique, in the company of some 300 other artists and intellectuals―André Breton and Claude Lévi-Strauss among them. Upon arrival, the passengers were interred at Trois Îles. It was during this forced passage in Martinique and before leaving for Cuba that Lam and Aimé Césaire met for the first time to become life-long friends.

Newly settled in his native land after almost twenty years, Lam delved deeper into his artistic investigations, finding nourishment for his ideas in the surroundings of his childhood and youth. His sister Eloisa, whom he was closest to, explained to him in much detail the workings of Afro-Cuban rituals and he began attending ritual ceremonies with some of his friends. This contact with Afro-Cuban culture brought new impetus to his art. He painted over one hundred canvases, most notably La Jungla, making the year 1942 his most productive of this period. Over the next few years, a number of exhibitions followed in the United States, at the Institute of Modern Art of Boston, at the MoMA of New York, at the Galerie Pierre Matisse, where La Jungla was presented and created a scandal.

In 1946, Lam and Helena travel to Haiti and attend voodoo ceremonies in the company of Pierre Mabille and André Breton. Talking about his experience in Haiti, Lam said, “It is often assumed that my work took its final form in Haiti, but my stay there, like the trips I made to Venezuela, Colombia or to the Brazilian Mato Grosso only broadened its scope. I could have been a good painter from the School of Paris, but I felt like a snail out of its shell. What really broadened my painting is the presence of African poetry.”

Lam then went on to New York where he renewed contact with Marcel Duchamp and made new acquaintances: Jeanne Reynal, James Johnson Sweeney, Arshile Gorky, John Cage, Roger Wilcox, Mercedes Matter, Ian Hugo, Jesse Fernández, John Cage, Sonia Sekula and Yves Tanguy. By the end of the 1940s, Lam divided his time between Europe, Havana and New York, where they stayed with Pierre and Teeny Matisse as well as Jeanne Reynal. He enjoyed the company of numerous artists: Noguchi, Hare, Motherwell, Pollock, Asger Jorn and the dissident surrealist group CoBrA.

From 1947, Lam’s style began to show new developments: a pronounced presence of esoteric elements and a coupling of the influence of Oceanic art with that of African art. His reputation as an artist had spread internationally. Articles on Lam appeared in prestigious publications and reviews around the world such as VVV, Instead, ArtNews and View, and exhibitions of his work in the United States, Haiti, Cuba, France, Sweden, England, Mexico, Moscow and Prague.

After his divorce with Helena Holzer, in 1952 Lam settled in Paris. In 1955, he met the Swedish artist Lou Laurin―the couple would marry in 1960. He wins the Grand Prix of the Havana Salon and, in 1958, is named a member of the Graham Foundation for the Advanced Study in Fine Art in Chicago and received numerous awards, most notably the Guggenheim International Award in 1964.

Throughout the 1950s, while maintaining close contact with Cuban art circles, Lam became increasingly involved with European artistic currents, developing close ties with CoBrA artists and the Italian avant-garde. He also joined post-war movements such as “Phases” and the Situationist movement.

In 1954, Lam met the poets Gherasim Luca and Alain Jouffroy. He traveled to Italy, to Albissola, on the initiative of Asger Jorn and Édouard Jaguer who had organized an international meeting of sculpture and ceramics which included as participants: Appel, Baj, Corneille, Dangelo, Fontana, Scanavino and Matta. Encouraged by the art dealer, Carlo Cardazzo, they would transform this little Italian village on the Ligurian coast into a gathering point for artistic experimentation, from the late fifties through to the late sixties.
During the 1960s, Lam’s work reflected a growing interest for engraving. Collaborating with poets and writers, he undertook several important projects in printmaking: large format portfolios, pulled and published in the print studios of Broder, Mathieu and Upiglio, most notably: La terre inquiète by Édouard Glissant (1955), Le voyage de l’arbre by Hubert Juin (1960), Le rempart de brindilles by René Char (1963), Apostroph’Apocalypse by Gherasim Luca (1965), L’Antichambre de la Nature by Alain Jouffroy (1966), Annonciation by Aimé Césaire (1969). His meeting with the master engraver Giorgio Upiglio at his studio Grafica Uno in Milan inaugurated a period of intense creativity that would last all the way up to Lam’s death in 1982.
From 1964, Lam divided his time between Paris and Albissola Mare, in Italy, where he set up a painting studio in his new house. He close friends with many writers and artists, and his work would be celebrated in many exhibitions and retrospectives around the world.

Jean-Louis Paudrat

(Translation by Unity Woodman)

Biography: Cundo Bermúdez

cundoCundo Bermúdez was born in September 3rd, 1914. He began studying High School when he was 13 years old, and shortly afterwards he attends the Academy of Fine Arts. The very painter quotes: “A relative of mine, who watched my drawings, took me to the San Alejandro Academy, so I would learn how to draw. But I left it very soon, I did not like teaching (…) 1933 university strikes when Gerardo Machado was overthrowned and later students´protests against Batista, increased my high school years.” In 1934 he began studying Diplomatic Law in the University of Havana -to satisfy his family –but the closing of the institution allowed him to graduate,only, in 1941. Before, he had exhibited with four young artists in Albear Park, in 1937 and had travelled abroad a year after. “In 1938 I went to Mexico to study drawing. There I got very impressed by Mexican painting and its themes.” When he returned to Havana he developed a numerous activities: “In those years I studied, worked and painted. My first individual formal exhibition was in the Havana Lyceum, in 1942. Then I felt quite influenced by the greatest Cuban painters from previous generation: Amelia Peláez, Carlos Enríquez and others” –explained the artist. After several trips to the United States of America, and Haiti, he travelled to the Old Continent:: “Later on, in the early 1950´s, I went to Europe to see its museums. I spent nine months in Sapain, Italy and France, I was already influenced for the modern in itself, but there I got impressed by Spanish masters, mainly Velázquez.

In 1958, Bermúdez was abroad aiming to exhibit his works. He returned in 1960, but his thought and attitudes took him to isolate from political environment and to concentrate on his artistic ongoing, preparing exhibitions in Lima and Santiago de Chile. He left Cuba in 1967. Then he settled in Washington and later in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He has achieved international acknowledgement, two of his works belong to the collection of the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), New York. In 1956 he won the Prize from the International Exhibition of the Caribbean, sponsored by the Museum of Fine Arts of Houston, Texas. In 1973 he was awarded in the exhibition Tribute to Picasso, held in Washington. He has participated in the Biennial of Venice and in the Biennial of Sao Paulo

A little bit about: Roberto Fabelo

fabelo

Roberto Fabelo (born 1951 Camagüey, Cuba) is a contemporary Cuban artist. He is both a painter and illustrator. Born in Guáimaro, Camagüey,Fabelo studied at The National Art School and at the Superior Art Institute of Havana. He was a professor and a jury member for very important national and international visual arts contests. The Cuban state awarded him a medal for National Culture and the Alejo Carpentier medal for his outstanding artistic career.

1972 Prize. Painting. II Youth National Salon of Visual Arts, Havana.
1973 Prize. Painting. National Salon of Arts Instructors and Professors, Havana/Mention. Drawing. National Salon of Arts Instructors and Professors /Mention. Painting. III National Youth Salon.
1974 Grand Prize. Drawing. National Salon of Arts Instructors and Professors
1976 Escuela Nacional de Arte (ENA), Havana, Cuba
1976 Prize. Drawing. Contest 26 de Julio, Havana/Mention. Engraving. National Salon of Visual Arts, Matanzas, Cuba.
1977 Mention. National Salon of Drawing, Pinar del Río, Cuba.
1978 Acquisition Prize, Third Contemporary Art Triennial, New Delhi, India
1979 National Drawing Prize Arístides Fernández, Havana, Cuba
1980 First Prize in Drawing, Salón Nacional de Artes Plásticas de la UNEAC, Havana, Cuba
1981 Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA), Havana, Cuba
1981 Adquisition Prize. Girón Salon, Havana/Prize. Hermanos Saíz Brigade. National Salon on Small Format, Havana.
1984 International Prize in Drawing Armando Reverón, I Havana Biennial, Havana, Cuba Prize in Drawing, Rijeka, Yugoslavia Prize in Drawing “lntergrafik ’84”, East Germany
1985 Abel Santamaría Medal. Council of State of the Republic of Cuba.
1988 La Rosa Blanca (The White Rose) National Prize. Best Work on Children Book Illustration, Havana.
1993 First Prize, XI International Drawing Biennial, Cleveland, UK
1996 First Prize, I Spanish American Watercolor Biennial “Viña del Mar”, Chile
1996 UNESCO Prize for the promotion of visual arts
2004 National Prize of Plastic Arts.

Meet the Artist: Dustin London

By Alex Allenchey

Dustin London

Fascinated by simple and direct visual experiences, Dustin London creates works defined by monochromatic schemes, stark lines, and geometric precision. Preferring to construct small-scale paintings, his works are frequently site-specific and temporary, often designed to be painted over at the end of an exhibition. We spoke to London, a 2011 NYFA fellow, about his thoughts on impermanence, his inspirations, and his enthusiasm for French Nabis painter Pierre Bonnard.

You create small, abstract, site-specific wall paintings that you then heavily document before their inevitable destruction. Why is impermanence so important in your work, and, likewise, documentation?

Just before I started making these I was interested in ephemeral visual moments, but was making paintings on canvas that were essentially descriptions of experiences. For example, a simple line may have referred to a shape caught out of my periphery while walking my dog. At a certain point it seemed more appropriate to cut out the middle-man, as it were, and allow the work itself to become impermanent rather than refer to impermanence through a rather concrete form. This corresponded to an ongoing desire for freshness and openness in the work, never wanting to close anything down. It seemed appropriate to shift the work to a place where it was more about process, where a piece became an action or decision in a specific place and specific time, inseparable from me as a living, breathing human being, where the piece also had a certain lifespan. Documenting these actions just felt natural.

Your paintings vary in size from more standard 12-x-8 and 11-x-7 dimensions to works that are barely more than an inch in diameter. What led you to start working on such a small scale?

Tenderness.

Recent paintings of yours from the past year suggest incomplete diagrams or architectural drawings. How do the locations at which you paint affect what you ultimately create there?

The first works that took on this diagrammatic quality were done directly on the wall in a strangely piecemeal architectural space, where the quirks of that space found their way into the idiosyncratic compositional decisions of the work. These newer pieces have not responded to a specific interior space, but to the landscape of southeastern New Mexico where I recently joined my wife at a yearlong residency program. Every point in space there is a kind of singularity, where a fence post or a yucca plant stands undeniably where it is in relation to the vast and open space around it. I think I intuitively responded to the clarity in that, and all that open space became very meditative for me as I looked out my studio window onto that one steady horizon line. I think the work naturally found a similar emptiness in which it could establish clear points and relationships. I also wanted the work to become a more extended meditation, to grapple with a piece over time, so I’ve shifted again to working on more permanent surfaces.

You’ve previously mentioned French painter Pierre Bonnard as having a substantial effect on your practice. Known for his practice of painting from notes or studies, in what ways in particular do Bonnard’s colorful scenes influence your more formally reserved work?

Bonnard’s consciousness is extremely porous, and that is always evident in his mid-late paintings. Those paintings are formed as much from his mind as they are from any external reality in front of him. They are intimate and buoyant, and it feels like my eyes touch a nerve ending that exposes all of his innermost thoughts and feelings when I look at any given point in a painting. For me, he’s one of the most sensitive humans to have lived.

You’ve been known to draw inspiration from the most incidental event or scene. Do you have any advice for better reveling in the quotidian and honing one’s receptivity to everyday beauty?

I would never feel right advising anyone on something so deeply personal. I can only say that I strive, like most people probably do in some way, to strike the right balance between working time/meditation, being in the company of those I love, and getting my fix of beauty (whatever that is at a given time) in the world around me.

What made you want to become an artist?

Two things. The first is an experience I had when I was five years old where I tried to imagine nothingness while laying in a bathtub. It made me keenly aware of myself, my existence, and a certain connection to the universe. Making work became a way to keep myself close to this place. The second is probably my dad’s love of birds and carving them out of wood. The material and forms of these birds, along with the constant scent of wood burning I think began my love of making early on.

What is your favorite place to see art?

Dia: Beacon…what a sanctuary.

What do you collect yourself?

If I had the means to collect, I would buy everything I could of Edward Gorey’s work.

What book has had the biggest impact on your work, or life?

I would have to say Dog! by Prudence Andrew (1975), which was the first book I ever read. A young boy adopts a stray dog and hides him in an abandoned car in a field. Its wet and wintery landscape with dead trees and overcast skies aligned so perfectly with my temperament in a similar way that Joyce did later on.

What would you be doing if you weren’t an artist?

I would probably be a musician/composer. I need to have a self-generating practice and composing music is a similarly abstract kind of making for me, one that comes out of the process putting sounds together in specific ways. I would also probably make strange and janky instruments.

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